Conservation Letters (Mar 2024)

What is the risk of overcollecting for translocation? An opportunistic assessment of a wingless grasshopper

  • Michael R. Kearney,
  • Hiromi Yagui,
  • Ary A. Hoffmann,
  • Ben L. Phillips

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/conl.12999
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 2
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Translocation is an increasingly used tool in conservation management, but there is a risk that source populations are overcollected. The risk depends critically on the detection probability and the source population size. We quantified this risk for a wingless grasshopper population in a patch of remnant habitat in suburban Melbourne that was condemned to be cleared for housing development. We collected ∼2000 grasshoppers in five samples spread over 1 month and used the results to estimate the initial population size (∼3400) with high confidence. Despite our perception of substantially depleting the population, we removed only an estimated 60%, and this relatively high fecundity (∼50 eggs per lifetime) annual species had recovered by the following year to near its original density. Wild‐to‐wild translocation is likely to be a low‐cost and effective strategy in the conservation of many invertebrates, and our findings highlight the feasibility of using natural source populations.

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